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The Circle, February 4, 1971.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 8 No. 3 - February 4, 1971

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·
.
Sunday
-
.: Novemb~r 22
;'
1970 -
·
.
destruction. of
~
PAIGC.
-
(Guinea
'"
;
:
-'
On the. niotjung of
:
November
-_::
Nevertheie~ the
·
U.N:
ritissfon
°
(Gh~a:
··
uganda; So~ali~,'
sie~
-
.:
..
early
iir
the morning Portuguese
,
Bissau, Liberation
,
Moveinerit)
:
23
~d the evelling of Nove
_
mber
reported
:
that White Portuguese .. Leone,
··
Senegal, ; Ivory
.
Coast;
.
·
·
•.

,
ships could be seen.Iuikiilg
.
off
,·• ·
headquarters, . seizing of the
::

23~4
i
invasion attempts were
:
troops were the
main
force of Tanzania, -Dahomey - to name a
.
.
·
··
the coast
ii1

Guinea's:, territorial
,
Catrip
Alpha Yaya military base,
~
again app~enUy carried
.
out -
the
invasion and were 'delivered few )
·
..
The O . A
;
l!.
a Is o
(.
J
-
-
~

·
'
..
.
.
~

•.
-
waterii. Hundreds of-Pioti.iguese

:
tlie· airports and the
.
ndio
·
.
although·
·
some sources believe
to the shores of Guinea by ships
condemned NATO members for
~
exiled
.
Guinean;
-.arid
bfack·, sfaiiori; along·
.
with
-
.-
attacking
-
these
-
were just afast-ditch effort· commanded by white Portugese
·''allowing:
through
_ <
their
:
African
·
nierceriary
.
troops have
·
Villa Belle Vue~ the presidential
,
to r
_
et~ieve
.
the n~r s~cce~ful_
"
.
of!ic~rs. The result of the U:N.
complicity and assistance various
.
··
l
already landed and are-fighting
-
Palace. At
-
the Palace the
·
bu
_
t battered foreign invasion
m1ssi~n was a U;N
_
Secunty
'attacks
by Portugal against
i
·
in the streets of
Conakry;
In the "inercenaries
bad
been
.
turned
.
forces. After what one European
·
Cowicil
.
resolutio~
.
condemning several African territories and
.
,
1
·
·
words
of
the
·
swiss-:(:harge back by troops .commanded by eyewitDess called, "fighting
.
.
th~. Po~uguese aggression and states." At the
·
present
.
time
<
·
.
·
d 'A
ff airs
·
on
'
Conakry: President Toure•
·.
himself -
-
which lasted for two consecutive
calhng_on NATO powers to stop Portugalthree colonies in Africa
"Suddenly·
.
uniformed ·white machine gun in hand;
days," upwards of
·200
to
300
.
supplying arms to Portugal - the (Port. Guinea, Angola, arid
·
·
mercenary soldiers appeared in
.
The radio
·
station arid airports,
·
people were·believed dead,
.
,
U.S. abstained no negativ~ votes
Mozambigue) and
is
carrying gut
·
.
·
...
·
.
·

.
·
·
·
lit
·
!?
:
the streets firing
at
·.
everyone
·•
-
despite heavy fighting, remained
·
·
.
So
.
reads the reality. of
an
~ere cast .
.. ·
·
>
.
: ·
·•
·
. ·
·
wars in all of them; U.S. arms
.
they
·
saw. They were ~xtrem~ly iri goyernment hands. But outrageous_ fo!eign
.
invasion of
·
.
0 n
.
D>.; em g e
.
r
·
~
0
·
a
_
n
have been
.
found
in
..
use by
well armed and opened
·
up with continued
.
·.
fighting at .. Camp a11other sovere~gn state. News of emerg~ncy O;A;U.
:
meeting was · Portugese fighting . African
-

~
·
'i
}
bazookas, mortars and
-
machine
'
Alpha Yayitarid the
·
shelling of
.the.evenfspread·outofC011akry
held in
.
Lagos to
·
dis~u~s the Nationalists in these three
.
·
.
.
(
.
·
guns
.
A
lot
-
of

people
·
.
.
·were
Conakry
·
forced
·
Toure'
,
:
to
·
call

·
-
to
.
.
all
-
parts ofthe world in many
event. The
·
0:A.U.
,
.was
1n
full
colonies
.
There
·
are, altogether,
.
.
;
·.
'
. coming hon'le
.
.-
from.late night for iniinediate
,
intervention
,
by
.
a
·
,
varied version. The truth,'
·
agree~~nt
·
with the
_
U.N.
eight wars within Africa in
.
./:
<:
\
:
j
parties. They were caught in the U,N. :airborne troop~
)9
help the
·
_

predictably, did finally come out
·
·
resoluti~>n, the only
·
.
differences which western NA TO powers
are
.
·· .·
·
)
streets
.
an(,i casualties
·
were
.
natiorial army .
.

.
:-
., \
'
.
. ..
.
_
~when a U,N.
·mission
sent to
of oprnion bet
_
ween African
.
·
involved - a ninth
'in
'
Biafra
l
.
heavy."
.
.. .
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
<
Meanwhile PAIGc,

playiilg
:
an
.
·
Guin~a
by the
.
Security Council
-
states arose out of. variation
-
in ended just one year ago .with
_
(
_
At the
·
same time other siniilar
· .
important
part
:
iii
>
defending

·
issued their findings.
:
The earlier
·
aid which
_
were offered by each

over
.
two
.
million Nigerians left
·
J
forces
·
had lande
.
d and split off Conakry,
·
crushed the
'
invaders af.
:
requests by Toure' for armed
~ountry

some offering military
d
_
ead.
·
.
. ·
.
.
I
·
for other missions; freeing of
·
Camayenne but not before many
·
·
·
assista·nce wei:e
·
effectively
aid
..
(U.A.R.,
.
Nigeria, Algeria)·
The United States reaction to
J
Portugese and Guinean political
.
Prisoners had been freed. PAIGC blocked by the U.S.A. and
e>thers
-responding
.
with verbal,
.
j
prisoners at Camarenne Prison, H.Q.s h~wev~r
·
was wrecked.
·
Brit:lin in the Security Council.
.
·
.material or financial- support,
CON'T. P. 3 • Col. 3
I
1HE
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VOLUME8
11
N.U
111111
MB~R
3 .· .
.
.
·
.
··
.
_.
MARIST
·
coLLEGE, POUGH~EP--SI_E_,
NEW Y·O·R·K-1~~260
111
1
· - ·
.
.
FEBRU:Y 4,
1971
,
I'
:f
.
:
.
9rcle ~fiterview
~,AMESoA:Y ·
:
.
·.
.
-_
.
·.
.
.
High
:
schools
Begin
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.·;
decfded
·
·
fo __ .presenCinfoimation
·
noYi with
-
the
·
athleti~ d>mplex is
·-:
said
:
Jhe
.
plans
\
wowcf call for-a
·
>
.Service
:
System
·
about'·
60%
.
of-: ,was
_
being used at Arlingtqri or
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supplied i1t"
_
aJ?,:interyi~)v w~t~))(
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that
-
it is
)
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the
.
p
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r( )>lanriing
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t~g
·oCthree
·
~nd
,:.
a
_
half
:
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:
he _c?unfr.y ,;
. :
.
~igh
;

schoo1 ·~
_
any
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O
the
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other
·
atea ·
..
high
·:

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c?nc~,;:m~g t~1s ~ue
,
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stage;
,
.
]t
.. '·
w,ill
<
most:-
-
in.cely
.
·
-
lle

.
.
,
milhqn
:
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.
pro bl~IIl
· ·
ad mm is
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a
~ors
,
J;ia
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ve
.
,
.
recen~ly
· ·
•.
,
~choo~s. To
,
hi_s

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knowlt:dge,
.
!he
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!t mig.'J,t
-
~e interes~mg to 11ote
:
locate~
-
_
op
.
the s9u~h
·
end of Jha!
.:
OC,C:~~
:
f!o~a. v~nture of
..
:
requ~stedto ~xam1p~ a new,h!gh
_
idea
·
·
1s orily m
,
the
·
discu~10n
-
.
a1
Kt·'\
··-.
_;:
,
Jhat a
)naJor
fear

1s, that the
:
-Fampus
-
and would
.
lious~ _an
·
th~s
"
~
.s~ze
is U~e
~
cos_t of
;-;
school
_
c~rnculum explaining
.
stages_ ay the present time.
}
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'fC,
,
,
··
i/
.
c_omplex, which,.. .would
·
cost· indoor-outdoor pooL-In addition
.
mamtauung _the buildm~, 1t has_ how Jhe
.
draft works; Already · Furthermore,
.
. Mr_;
.
·
Polster
.
\:f

(:f
i
·
·
.
·.
<
roughly three and a
half
million
/
to the_
,
poolarid basketball court
.

been approximated that 1t v.rould.
:_
NewYoikCity has adopted this
.
indicated that due
to
'
the small
•·
..
'.
1N
f:.,
,\
-
<
.'
.
.
.
dollars would
.
be
'
built from
a
·
n
various instructional facilities
-
_
cost
"
$100,000
dollars a
.
year,
CURRICULUM

GUIDE
·.
TO
amount of material concerned

q
t.t,
/:i.': •
:::
t:•
increase~
'.i:n
.
tuition.
-
This is
:
would be included,
.· ·.·..
.
.
.. ··
.
This cost could possibly raise the THE DRAFT for use in all 93 of
with draft counseling, the guide
.
fl
ii
t){_
,;
,
·

\
>
.
imfounded -according
;
to

Linus
.:
·
..
The, term
.
pre~plan'nlng. stag~ cost of tuition one· hundred its
·
public
'.
higli

.
schools; and
would most' likely be integrated
.
;
i
){
A{:.
:
·
_
'
:
'
Fe>y:;
tll~
comple~
_
would, b
'
ebuilt wa_s
',
exjiiained
~~r
J~r.
Foy
·
as
·
.
.
dollars
·
a: yea~ per student.
_
·
.
.
:
_
many
:
m_ort: of
.
our ilatiO!J-'S
!nto the r~gular
·
curric~lu!Il
,
{ {
:
+
.:
:i
.i/•.,:
,
..
.
from
,-
_
gift
.
funding. T
_
he
.
only
.
being
·
a stage m development
·
·.
What must be understood
.
1s school
-
d1stncts are followmg
mstead of bemg a cqurse
.
within·
·
,
li';
: :"'-
.
:
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.
:
'

.
_
>
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·
-


..
-.
·
·


.
,
.
that this athletic complex
vvill
,
suit
,
'
:
.
·
.
.
.
itself.
.
/.·
.
·
:
-
.
·
'
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-
-
~
.-
·-
c1rcle
..
;
Interv1ew-
_by.JOHNWYNNE
riot
·
be of
-
f
.
ield house
In an i
_
n~erviev.:
:
v.:ith Mr;
Undoubtedly, co
'
unseHng
·
,;
t
.
·
_ ·.
.
.
..

.
.
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-•
,
.
.
.
·
.
,
·
.
.
.
.
Fo 1st er,
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v1ce-prmc1pal
.
of
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··
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CON'T:P;4--~ol.}
::-
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·.·
.
Arlington
:
High
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School, the'..,_
.
CO
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N'T;P.4-Col.
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-
n
:
f
~l;/
.
.
ThOp!;!:t!teir~~~~iJ-%~~~
.
.
Ap
_
plie_
d
._
I
__
o _
'.p
·
"
-
ics
_
·.
In
Scien
_
·ce
_
'
~.
-
,.
.
.
is to get
.
some
_
11qderst~diiig of
·
think that the
'
way
_
t
.
lie building
-
:
\f
::.
··.
·
ho~ the Supery!sor views
.
the
.;
was
-
constru
·
cted
-.
·
~
·
to
·
cost
by P~LIP GLENNON
_
.
.
·
A:{amtenance Depa,rtment.
··
>
.
determine the constructfo.n:Ut
is
·
·
·.
·

:<:.
·
.
Mr. P3:ve~ko has been at_ Marist not what you .would call
'.
tne best
:
Applied Topi~ in Science is
a
.
titled Marist Eco Action is
also
.
n~w/or ~t}ven years: Preyio_llS !o of buil(\fngs, and the trouble
·
course totally unlike
apy
other
.
-
planned.'
.
Believing
·
that people
,:::
:·:
_
thtS he d1~c~ed mc1intenlll1ce.m
·
with the heat there is that
m
·
an
found at this institution. The
should first work in their
>
,-_
~e~
_
York C1~
.
a_nd f?r
'.
a bij.ef.
:
extrern
·
e temperature the skiii'of fact that it is a
9
credit
pass-fail
.·.
ti~e was
,
associated with Allied
··
the
,
building
will
cool
.
down and
·
.
cptirs~ d~es in itself distinguish
.
M8:1ntenaI].ce_ Co. at the World's even
·
the heat:that
is
in the if
·
from
'
other courses but the
·
Farr. He wished to get away building has
·
all it cari dofo keep important distinction
is
that
:it
.
·
-
from
N.Y'.~.
an
_
~ ~~oµ~t the!e up te> make it comfortable. But
_.
wilLenable
.
those in it to
wou~d
·
be
·
gratification
m
you
will
find
,
·thafthis
situation
·
participate
in
.
a
_co111prellensive·
:
working at a college~
·
_
.
_ ·
,
·
.
prevails mostly when
we
are in a
. -
educational expene!lce.
.
Q:
What ~o ygu consider to ~e
·
c
O
n sistent period
·
of low
_
0
-
The cours~
.
1s ~emg co-taught
t h _e
_
ma
J
~
r prob I em rn temperature.
.
_
.
.
_
·
by D~. Malvin Michelson of the
_
mau_itenance.
-
.
..
.
. .

Q:
Last year there was
·
a
_
Chenustry Department a~d M~ .
.
·
·
_
A. W~ll, ,some_ of our buildm~ proposal to
.
put insulating ori the
~ouckman of P~ughkeepsie. It 1s
·
have
.
certlll!' qwrks because the
·
windows in
·
Sheahan. What
aimed _at educatmg peopleto the
construction costs ~were _cut happened there?
·
.
.
ecol~gical problems
?f
the area
down an~ therefore there
IS
a
A: we
·
did put a weather ·and involving them_ m attempts
h~~
ma?1tenance cost on t~ese stripping in but most weather
to work out ~olutions. At
·
th_e
~uildin~. B1;1t one of the thin~ stripping with the self adhesive
.
present stage the course 1s
·
nght now
IS
.
that we have·_a doesn't hold up much.
large~y devoted !o
_
the

heavy wor~oad because there 1s
Q: Are there any plans to put educational phase, meetmg 9:30
a lot of things
.
undone ,hat we more weather stripping in
'
to 1 1: 3 0 on Monday,
are trying tQ do through Sheahan? There
·is
a definite
Wednesday,
-and
Friday
maintenance and there
-
is
a draft
·
coming through the
mornin~. The class will shortly
certain amount of ... well I windows.
·
be breaking down in separate
woul~n•t want to
·say
it's
.
A: You will feel that draft on
groups whi~h will work with
vandalism but some of the things
-
ariy skin. When you have
area people m problems they are
that _are broken an~ kept ~ut of windows unless you go into
facing.
.
Those areas which have
repair are_ due to mISabuse m the thermpane windows, you are
surfae:ed _where people are
dormatones
.
.
.
going to have cold
air
coming in
~e:oming involve~ are_ Model
Q: What ab?ut !he heating through the windows. Now, the
Cities, ~d working wit~ area
problem~ especially
1!1
Sheahan'? whole idea in heating a building
~tto~ey_ Noel Tepper m an
immediate
area
a
:
group is
fc:>rming to. work at establishing
re-cyc
_
ling at Marist.
·
A: Well, there agam Sheahan
.
1
mvest1gat1on of Urban Renewal.
-
cowr.
P. 3-Col.
An insert for Common Sense
DR. MALVIN MIOIF.LS0N




























































PAGE2
.. A·TTITUDES: ·ouTRAGEOUS
.
. .. . . . by BILL O'REILLY .: . . .
.
· .
· · It is always' reassuring: to know. that some people do· read ,my
column; Just last week some: of my, biggest fans even wrote letters to
the. editor heroically
defending·
a person who
I
so savagely attacked
in
one of my articles.-These letters'Were very.interesting.:
· .
_
I really liked the on'~y Manfred .Hall (no relation to Monty) but
. my parents
were
not to pleased aboutit In fact
I
am now homeless -·
because my parents will
ot
allow
a
racist who levels sick, perverted
accusations at people into tfieir.home. And-who can blame them -
· they. fear for their lives. My parents had only one question of me --
, they wanted to know .what column Manfred was referring to in
his.
letter.
. ·
,
· . · . ,
.
·
:
·
·
·
At Manfred's suggestion
I
was also thinking of transferring but the
. only school that would accept someone
as un-American as
I am is
AI8:bama
R&F .
(Racist & Fascist) and they will not accept my
Theology credits. So
I
guess it's still Marist - Love it or Leave it --
just like America right Manfred?
-
·
.
_
· Summing up,
I
now have no where to go. Gee,- Manfredi, see what
you did. Perhaps your parents will adopt me,
. . -
.
But, seriously, gang, my favorite letter was the on~ by James
E.
.. Daly-.
l was a little surprised by James E's letter because the day_
after the infamous Landleft column come out James E. came over to
me and told me how much he liked the article.
I
was alsoin the same
political science class
as James E: and his comments to me
throughout the semester were strangely inconsistent with his letter.
But -then James E., you old devil, you do owe the teacher in
question a favor. (How do
I
know? - James told me.) And you are a· ·
Political Science major. Well anyway James
E., I'm not angry, I even
hope you make the Dean's list.
I liked your letter and I'm sure -the ·
one you write next week will be even better.
And now lets throw· the column over ~o questions from the floor.
"Yes, the young man foaming at the mouth in the front-row."• · -
·"Coward, Coward, ·you always wait until' you finish dealing with
· people before ·you write.about them. You are a real rat."· .
· ·
·
.
"Well thanks
~
lot
b:Ut
that is not really true. In my stay at Marist
I . -·
. have. satirized ·many. people and .still deal with them everyday. Most
of them took the satire good-naturedly, some did not.Jn
the
case of
·
the Football Coach
I thought it best to'waituntil afterthe season to
criticize his actions on the field because my article might have hurt
team morale. In the case of a·certain Political Science teacher
I
chose
to wait until after I completed her course because
I wanted to get
a
·complete view of how she conducted her class and, 'secondly, if I had -
. written the article while still in tH.e ·course it would have made it
virtually impossible for her to deal with me objectively as a student.
I
would also like to state that in both 'of these cases
I
aired· my views
to the people involved prior to the article:•i,
"Yes, next question, the girl wearing the lo·ve beads."
·
·
· "Assassin,- cutthroat, all. you do is destroy people~ characters, ruin
their -lives: You make · Murder Incorporated look like the · Kiwanis
·-Club."
.
· ''An interesting coniparision but .
I
don't think you have your
opinions straight .. You see·
I
do not satirize people for who they are
but .for: what they do •. My column does not involve slander of any
kind.
I
try to l,e _as honestas,po.ssib~e in
my
satire'. If I see a. situation
. that needscimprovement l-wilLdo;m.ybest to bring-the situation ~ut
· into the open :and· the best way ·I can do. this is through the use of
f;;./:•.\
}<};})>::-;- ·
f}~;\!Ah§~J;f~t~~tigh~i·;~~;th:{h~i.;j~~t Y6iitii
In~~~\iiith
the beer.
earl."_
~i
_ -
·
· _
·f--
_----·:·<r-.:,._.-.
·
_..
____
·t. ·
::
i
.
_
~
·
;-.,
--- _._·:::__
;.,.:::--~:
- <'You'
·
never'
db
ariytiiin!{6ortstructi\'e; )'OU•attack everyon
·
~ ~Hd'";
everything .. I think your related to Jack the Ripper."
.. _. _ .
_ •·wen
I
am not going to list the things that
I
have done while at
Marist but
I
wm ~ay this:
I
view my column as a constructive thing.
I
think humor and satire are constructive things. I also think that
there are some situations at Marist that need improveinent.
I try to
bring these situations to the attention of the community. If they
sometimes involve certain people ! try and leave names out of it but
if the situation is caused by a person
I have no recourse but to
satirize the actions of the person." .
. .
.
"It
seems that some p·eople never want bad situations to rise to the
surface. Sometimes the· truth hurts.
I
admire people like Father
Gallant who write · about Good News but if there:were not people ·
who brought out the bad news there would be a lot more. of it.
Finally a bad situation will not go away by ignoring it.
I
stand by
everything
I
write and say it is the truth;
I
will
listen to my critics .
but not be taken in by phoney actions and martyred outcrys. My
column will be here to May, people, and then, to.the relief of some, -
-
it will rest in peace."
· ·
_
·
, .
_
«One last question., Yes, the shaggy-,iaired young man dressed in
. black."
'"
.
"Just who was that column about Mrs. Landleft dir~cted at?"
"Hell, I thought· everyone knew, it was Mr. Whit_e;"
A Very Short- Story
by TOM HACKETT
Rationa~ization is per~al?s .man's greatest defense ~gainst insanity.
If
YO'!
thmk about It, ·1t IS probably possible to talk yourself into
any~Iung. We are all of us always making excµses for the t:1ings we ,
have do1:1e or are about to do: Many of the things we would like to
do are Just sounds traveling on empty air. only to drift into the
. vacum of eternity. Such they say is life.
,
· Lif~, however, consists more of actions than of talk when most
talk is in vain or just an unrealized cherished dream.
Life
consists of
a child's tear, and a mother's joy when the act of birth
is
done.
Li"'.ing i!l l~ving and understanding a~d it goes beyond the process of
·. rationaJizahon, The act of love is an act of life and an instant of
kindness or compassion is simply that which keeps love in life Life
is for the living. •.
· .
_ ·. •
. -
No matter what anyone tells me I cannot be shaken in my belief
that every man on this earth_ is in someway my brother.
This is
not
an ideal, it is a fact of existence. Every human being on the face of
this earth has the capacity to love: emotions are universal and are
not limited to any race or geographical entity. How sad it is that we
cloud our views of other human beings with stupid bias. "He who
stands in front_ of me cannot be my brother since he
is
my enemy.
He cannot befriend me because he does not think the same way I
. do.'' No body can think the way anybody else does because there
_
are
so
few people on this earth who dare to THINK. When they say
think they me.an rationalize. They are too shallow to know
it
-
And it is this warped rationalization that has enabled mankind to
talk himself into wars, pollution, hate, inhumanity and the like. The
sadest _part of the whole affair is that man continues to condition
man into this -way_ of •thinking'. The sweetest of all dreams is to
believe that it does not have to
be
so
,
that we.can uncondition
ourselves. That we can rctum to Christ.
If only we would begin to·
believe it.
[f
only. ·
THEciRCLE
FEBRUARY 4, 1971
-G:ood
·NeWs
·
-~ FR.I.EoGALJ.ANi'.:-;· · .
" .
. Levente
.was'.
at'Jli~·
ho~.
Titursda;:
night (Th~isday ~htJs ...
Mini-Coffee -House at Byme'st with about. twelve other Manst. ·
· students.· Levente is a new·student this semester.··a commuter from
· Wappingers Falls, _a very_ except!onal persQn ·
· ·
.
, .
.
He
is
28
years old;·he escaved from Hungary last year by
faking
a
· ' . trip to Bulgaria, but sneaking off the train in Yugoslavia: and crossing .
· the border into Italy. After a six in"onths
·
wait in Switzerland he
· came' to this country to Join his father and brother who had escaped
from the Communists in the 19.56 uprising.
. ·• ·. · . , . ;
·
· It would b.e an understatement· to. say .we had a most pleasant
evening, listening
t9
his stories and comments: One thing that .
impressed· me was the answer- to our question concerning
his ·
· impressions of• America. The freedom here just amazes him and -he
can't understand why _ the people are so ready to attack the
g9vern.ment .. and the President. After· listening to his. stories of .
oppression, -
I wonder
if
We should not be a bit more pat~ent with our
imperfect but pretty good government.
·
.
·
·
l understand that there are some students at Marist who speak 9r
understand Hungarian.
I would like very much to see them help
Levente who still has difficulti~ with the English language. (I don't
· know his last name, but we could find out easily.)
..
·
·
·
I_
am hoping to _have other f~reign students join our Mini <;offe~
House group in the future and share some of their culture with us
(How to eat \.Vith chop sticks???) . . , .
· , ·
· -
·. · ·
:
Other nice thing that Jiapperied this week. Mass Thursday night on
, ·. ·· Bill Paccione's tl6ot. with• over.SO residents attending and sharing the
bt~ad and wine; a' mass in C 317 at
a
most ungodly.hour; a talk with·
two Marist ·studerits who gave· rrie an account of _their apostolate,
teaching
CCD
it).
Highland;· and just getting to know more·students
· better.
·.
·
_, · · · ·
·
· · ·
·
·
A Jew interesting things coming up. The Jazz Mass Saturday night
with Part of the Mid-Hudsoh Philharmonic Orchestra and Ed
· . Summerlin's jazz group .. Ed Summerlin is•. wel1 known. throughout
the country as a composer of modern church music. His "Bless this
World", done· for· AGO. '70 with: the - collaboratio~ · of Roger,
9rtmayer.
is
an unorthodox, unusual and stimulating contemprary
worship celebration.
It
has
been put on at·Vassar and
will
be put ort. •:
. at New Paltz (without the Mass). Here the music will begin·at
ll
:45
with the Mass beginning ·at midnight. Two slide projectors will cast
pictures on sheets hanging from_ the ceµing.
. .
.
· This is a $700 production; btit since
it
is subsidized by the
government our cost will be minimal.
>-:
.
. ·
The·'Gaelic Club Dinner-Dance on Friday Feb .
.12
should ulso be
.on your. calendar.: The Children's theatre will benefit .. especially .. ·
Here's your opportunity to be charitable in a most enjoyable way.
·
For
a
real thrill,:.drop.in·the Center on.Saturday noon to see the
Children's·Tlieaff.e,in action. It's unbelievable. I Don't know who are
the children, Jeo Detuta and.his gang or the tykes?
·
_
Sorry about my little attack (in Letter to the Editors) on
Bill
·o•Reilly and the edjtors. They are a. great bunch.
I
wouldn't miss.·
Bill's articles for anything and the editors are high in my book..But J.
couldn't resist putting in
my
70 cents. Inflation.
· -_
·
·
. ,_, ,,Disabled,Jn
Action ,
•).t':,)
,
:
C
• •
• ;. ;
·
-
-.--::;
: .
by
MIKEW~RO ,
.
·..
> :·. - -~ ·--:-~~ ,
_
. ' ,, .
'.:·· ·'Y~en
·tJi~.'~ai~~is
,-~fr ;
_.s~;er;iy· :di~;bl~d-·p~rson: c~n
.
no longer -
provide the care he· needs, at the pJesent time · there is no effective .. ·
. solution for his needs. There is ,no residentiill ~are
for
the disabled!
Physically disabled are living in hospitals and mental-institutions
. on a residentiiil basis simpl}'._ because of the lack-of.proper facilities.
· State hospitals such as· Byrd
S.
Coler. and Goldwater Memorial on
Welfare Island, surrounded by the East.'River, constitute a low
inter-personal substitute for family relationships and _do much
damage to the motivation of the individual.
.
_
. H<;>spital iult:s prevail in this • situatio11 and the individual loses
dignity and freedom. This atmosphere forces the disabled to become
.dep
7
ndanton ~?ciety for all ~eeds and represses the opportunity to
achieve self-sufficency;.
·
.
·
··
.. . .,
- ·
I!
.h!ls been broligt-i.t to our attention that California has more ideal
facilities for t;he' adult disabled. There are· · several moteHike
co_m~lexes providing living quarters, entertainment and
· rehabp.itation J<tcilities in a· home-like atmosphere. ;Trips to)own for
shoppmg and. ent_ertai1:11nent are ,:arranged, and . the. residents are· -
l!llowed to com~.and go.with freedom~~
·
· ·
- :
:
>
A Plan of {!nited CerbraFPalsy will provide a residential sheltered
worksh,op com~lex for the sev·erely disabled; The ground breaking
iit
Br_?oklyn conshtutes't~~
-
first attempt in _New.York State
to
meet -
this need,
.
"
-
. "
.
-.
. .
. . .,
· Homelik
7
apartments and full time attendan~ will·supplem~nt the
_
late_st arch!tectural- and mechanical help .to implement normal living
for the residents. ··
·
· · ·
·
·
. . I
find most of these plans inadequate in that they isolate the
disabled from norm~!Jife. A much better plan was proposed in -the
Welfare Island Housmg Development where a. certain number of
apart1!1ents would be reserved and intermixed with apartments for
non:fisabled.
A st~ff member in each building would be available for
spe~Ial needs. _Tltjs, program·. would
.
proyide -the -freer exchange -Of ;
athtu_des- between :the residents: I_t would also educate the
non-disabled. tow_ard the social needs of the disabled. A lack of funds'
prevented this progr:
'l
from ever being tried.
.
.-
_
_ • _. Is
this
"great societ_y" ~o Jacking in_.compassion and ingenuity that
we · cannot tmd a better. way to mtegrate the disable into f""
equality?
.
Ull
Winter Fantasy Weekend
The . Gaelic Society is
sponsoring on February 12th at
9 p.m. their . second annual
Winter Fantasy Dinner Dance.
The Dinner Dance has been
co-planned with the College·
Union Board who on February
I 3th is featuring a concert with
Peter Tom
in
the Fireplace
lounge and the 14th with a top
notch Paul Newman flick. The
I 4th
is
also St. Valentine's Day
and so it should promise to be a
good weekend to enjoy with
your favorite valentine.
The Gael_ic Society
is
donating
a portion of its profits to
Children's Theatre who
will
be
sen cling·· their Production of,
Peter Pan down to Appalachia
this summer. The Dinner Dance
will include a fully spread buffet
dinner, all the beer and soda to
drink, and dining, dancing, and
singing to the music of Paddy
Noonan•s. Irish-American
. Showband, who are currently
engaged at New York's John
Barleycorn Pub. The student
price
will
be
SS.00.
.
So makt; a weekend out of the
Gaelic Society's and College
Union Board's cosponsored
Winter Fantasy Weekend.


























































,FEBJ!.UARY
4, 1971
'DIECIRCLE
.
·.
·
.
·Q:
What.is the big problem in
Q:
What about the campus
.'' . PA:~LKO - r~m
1
· . .
. · ...
converting. the bathrooms ·ror roadways? What.
is
being done
· is
to create· a lieating ,el~melit ·· co-ed ·· dormitory·
living.
_The about the potholes?
below·,
the
windows.. The: idea · ·work
was .
supposed -to be done . A: Because of the freezing
being that ·the heat
rises
.3B.d_·,.
during the~ suritmer but it
still
temperatures we cannot do ,
creates.·
sort
of· a · heat. :curtain
-
. hasn't been completed.
· anything now . but at the first
that counteracts the cold
draft·
. A:·. Well the bathroom opportunity temporary patches
coming
in .. Now . one .' of. the_ alt~rations:
are
under a private
will
be put in.
things in Sheahan too, especially
contractor and
:not
'under the
Q. :·.
The· ma in tenance
on -the girl's floor· if that the. maintenance- department. But
I
department has been--criticized
. students are :taking their · beds
have taken measures to see that about the condition·or its trucks
P~GE3
A Wilde·
Evening
·
With
.
Shaw·
Richard Gray and Mayo
Loiseau, who
will
appear
in
A
Wilde Evening With Shaw
-at
Marist College Theatre on Feb.
. toured prior to its New York
· engagement and is now in its 8th
-post-New York touring season ..
. .
·. a~d-- putting the_m :;by : the
we·
will
be planning _ahea~ on and heavy equipment.
< .. ; _
· _
. . ·
wind?ws. 1:hat _so~ ~f insulated · future projects oft~ nature. .
·A:
At. one time we · were
•. ; ·, ·. . : · . : the. circulation of
81I'
and
~
ask~d
,· The role of the maintenance
lS
: .· · :_ : · ... _. . . tb,em to move the_ ,beds;,Just
as
to- keep· the OTo_unds in good getting trucks donated to us and
1
h
th
ld ell
I
.,,.
they were sort of wrecks; We
. , . .
.. : ong as ";N_e av_e
lS
co sp ...
shape, to try and up~date things,
have gotten rid of most ofthese
· 5, 1971, are.also responsible
for
· its editing and arrangement for
the stage. · · . · . · : . ·
The show tells a story and
paints portra·its of two
fascinating men. Apparently
poles apart, they knew and
loathed each other but yet
admired one another's work .
The linking dramatically of these
two men is a first for the stage.
·
. .. ·.
.
know that· this would help
th
he ·
to
try to take areas that are
but we do need small vehicles
··
situation .. We are •
yery
muc
under
devel~t and
put
finishing
i
~
l
(,

'
~! .
~:_
·
,._;_
~1~\---
'\.
concerned.·
. .
touches."on tliem. · The for
_
th~ men to_ get around
Q.
Some of the rooms had no
.
d
rt
t •
-
campus in. We are _m t.he process
.. • ·
.
mamtenance. epa men
lS
a
f . tt·
Cushman
heat at
all
when the temperaturert· f th
11
d ·tis not o . ge rng some_
.
. .
was down· to 18 below zero.-
pa
0
h. e hco ege anak 1
· vehicles and we are interested m
Wh . .
.
.: t
ui
't?
somet mg t at we m e money our image.
. at1syourreact1on o
a..
on.· In my estimation
Q:
How are the employees
· . · A: Well,
1
sent a man
th
ete maintenance is a necessary evil recruited and hired and what
and suppo~edly he was to check because every · dollar spent
is ·
kind of benefits and salaries do
on everything ... Apparently there faking away money that could . they receive?
~as o~e or tw~ places
th
at ~e. be better put someplace else. I
. A: When the college started
di~ ~ . and
~
personally went · am concerned ab.out making the the. salaries . were low because
w1 th. -
~
Y ·
trou blesho?ter operation efficient and make the naturally you can only pay what
me charuc all over-
th
e Imes, work' really courit
And I think you could afford: Since . that
because after all I am concerned. that in the long run if we didn't
time the pay has been upgraded
'I
don't want the students to be have the horseplaying and
and I think we are sort of on a
unco.mfortable ... I ~now- tl_iat
thoughtlessness on the part of par with what is being paid in
· every convector was m wor~ng the students we could save a lot this area • not counting IBM of
order. I spent the whole. morning of money.
.
·
course.
there.
.
.
.
I . think personally that the
Q
H
d
th
l
Q:.
\\'.hat abo~t Donnelly Hall.
colfe_ ge goin<> co-ed has had a
: .
ow
o . e emp oyees
There
lS.
a heatmg ~roblem here beneficial effect. I think that negotiate . with the school? Do
also. Is there anything that can there i·s less horseplay now than the·y have any kind of union?
A: In the maintenance
be done about that?
. .
before.
d e Part me n t . w e have a
A: We generally check it out. I
. On drinking in the dormitories c
O
m mitt e e co mposeu of
do look into it b~ca:1se, after all, _ Jt upped the cost of. the representatives from each spher~
a heating complamt 1~ one of th_e
maintenance program · because
of the department to negotiate
most serious compl_a1~ts, and it we can no longer use the
has to _be _rectified. An_d dormitory incinerators"to d4ectly with mys<;lf and Mr.
generally tf I fmd that a room is dt'spose. of garbage. We have to Campili. The employees vote on
b
I
k
the. representatives to this
uncomforta le
ta e measures cart all the garbage to a dump
comniitte. They also receive
to see what c~n be done ... ~aybe near the airport and _we are
fringe benefits according . to
.the selector
1s
not ~orking or charged a dumping fee.
other clerical employ_e es of the
maybe the entire unit needs an
overhaul.
college ....
* * *
*
*
Changes In
<;:h_apli~'s
Q_~-P~-f~~~nt
.
.... _Fr. Gallant,h1s\_~fitjq~n~~tl,;jii~ ... Er:.} Rh~'&; :~illiitli{:: fhe~
.
'~irne:s _Residence, He ~ill ~o~e
,,,.followirig- chat),ges, fo<,the ·' Episcopalian<assistant .
·
chaplain,:
·
o_ut of his Fontain~ office °"'.'1thm .
'_·chaplain's department.
. .
will
·now have his office in th~ _,a.f~w·days: He: will be avat1a.bl~.
--•
·,
.. · ··
· · ·•. · ·
,
to students dunng the day.
·
·
·
·
·• Fi'.'
Fred Drobin,,- young
ll'te"
0 __
iaduatio.n .
~::~rci~sp1~fs!~/~:~~1~t
t!
t"
';/;
Byrne Residence, will be
·llud·
available for counseling during
(1 /)_
-n
t)
IJ
. . ')
the evening hours at Byrne. He
.J,,ri,t:,
·
W
·
"'
will also be available for some of
HAVE YOU CONSIDERED A RELIGIOUS
CAREER AS
A
MARIST BROTHER?
INFORMATION AVAILABLE
Tue., Wed., Thur.
. FEB. 9, 10, 11
IN THE STUDENT CENTER
VISITING BROTHERS ON MARIST CAMPUS: B. Woodrow Duke. B. Joseph
McAlister, B. John Cherry,
B.
John McDonnell;
B.
Raoul Molnar,
a;
.Philip R'obert .
.

'
· · ·. . for more information
384-6730
Parking Plan
Proves
·
Problematic
.
the weekday masses in the
chapel and help . out for the
weekend masses. . ·
Fr. Drobin who majored in
Scripture and Psychology is a
talented musician and artist. He
has done counseling in the inner
city of New York. He will be a
welcome addition to the
chaplain's counseling staff.
* *
* *
*
INVASION
~
fr6m 1
the Guinea invasion was from
the beginning quite clear. It is
by R.
D.ADERHOLDT
obsessed- by its economic
·
·
·
interest in Portuguese colonies
Parking on campus is a .big'. ·field : by the 'qld
·sL·
Mary's
and the strategic utility of
problem as everyone knows.
residence: Commuting- ·seniors· PCirtugal to. U.S. military
· Th ere are · a few thoughtless
can park m the new lot also, but mterests m NA TO as well as a
people who insist on parking in
if it
~ filled, then they have to lesser in the U.S. military base in
places other than the two main
park m the main parking lot off the Azores. Economic interests
parking • lots. The numerous
of the Waterworks road, north
take the form of Angolan coffee
tickets don't seem to have any
of Champagnat. All other
of which the .U.S. is the largest
effectasadeterrent,sothereare _resident and commuting
purchaser and Mozambique
two ideas in mind to. change this; ·· students are to park their cars in, natural resources in which the
No. 1 - Raise the· prjce of the :_ the mai.t:i parking lot north of ·
u:s:
Gul(Oil Co.· and American
fmes for illegal parking. ·
.
. Champagnat. ·The.- Donnelly area
International Oil Co. are chief
No. 2 · -·· All · cars _parked on and the area east of Champagnat
prospectors. Unfortunately . the
roadways or loading zone areas and ··Campus Center is for
United· States was caught m a
of the campus
will·
be towed
Faculty, Staff, and Visitors
'no-win' position; perhaps
away at the owner's expense.
parking only.
.
·.
through its own lack or fear of
We don't have to go this _far as
Please parJ< . in ~he P!oper
moral leadership. On the one
there are· always open· parking areas. Your cooperation
will
be
hand, condemnation of Portugal, ·
spaces in both parking lots.
If appreciated by eyeryone.
directly or through the U.N.
the few thoughtless people don't
* * * *
* ·
would mean trouble for U.S.
start obeying the regulations,
capital interests in Portu~ese
then these ideas
will
be put in
DISPOSAL -
from
s
territories and at the same time
use.
trouble for NATO interests. But
Resident seniors have two
every possible solution to this on the other hand lack of
areas to park in. Number one is
ever growing problem.
If
you support for African freed?m, as
the east-west ramp south of
have any question you would it has refused to offer m the
Champagnat Hall. Number two
like answered concerning th.is past, turns African nations away
is the new parking lot east of
project I would be glad to from the U.S. and towards the
Sheahan and west of the football
discuss them with you.
Communist· block (U.A.R.,
Michael
I. Cahill Zambia, Tanzania) an especially
Staged by the late Sir Cedric
Hatdwicke, famed for
11:is
interpretation of Shavian roles
and stager
of many of G.B.S.'s
plays, A Wilde Evening With
Shaw
is a dramatization of the
lives an-' wit of Oscar Wilde and
George Bernard Shaw which
Tickets are available at $1.50
for students, $2.50 for
non•students. Curtain time
is.
8,:30.
RICHARD GRA
YAND.MA
YO LOISEAU.
.
•.
-
.
.
.
BIG RED ;_
from
8' ·
change hands 8 times as well as
the score being tied 7 times.
Monmouth led 32-24 with 6:25 ·
on a foul shot by Guard, Pete
Cusick. Ray Clarke l~d the Red
Foxes back with a
1 S foot jump
shot to tie the score at 33-33
with 3:50 remaining in the half,
and· Ray Manning put the Red
Foxes ahead with a layup 35-33
with 3:10 remaining .
Monmouth's 6'7" Forward, Ed·
Halecki tied the score at 35-35
on a short jumper with 2:50
remaining, but Ray Clarke came
back with a 20 ft.jumper with
2: 3 2 remaining in the half.
Marist went on a short. spurt to·
lead at halftime 49-39. Joe :Scott
paced Marist with 13 points.
frightening trend to Washington.
Perhaps the U.S. just considers
it
a risk to care about the
immature black nations - as its
voting record at the U.N. tends
to suggest; Once the U.S.
categorically condemned t~e
Portugese coionialism but now 1t
has · taken a softer tone on the
issue, due again to the U.S,
belief in African instability.
Though to suspect a new moral
leadership from Washington is
obviously a bit too optimistic.
by playing down Portugese
involvement in the Guinea
invasion and playing up the
possibility of internal strife. (all
African nations are l~nstable) the
U.S. managed to sidestep
decision on the moral principles
involved in such an invasion.
This type of U.S. policy can
only lead to trouble. It has been
suggested that the U.S. has, for
much too long, been avoiding
morality in world situations and
has been following its NA TO
allies into policies it should
consider for itself. The U.S.
followed Britain in regards to
Rhodesia, Biafra and South
Africa and it has followed the
· .The Red Foxes maintained a
healthy lea·d until there'was 8: I 0
remaining in the game. Center,
Charles West hit a
8
foot jumper
to make the score 70-66 in favor
of Marist. Steve Sha.ckel came
off the bench to help build up
the lead to 85-74 with 3:27
remaining in the game, but
Monmouth still fought back.
· Forward, Don Kleber scored on
a layup to cut the score 89-85
with 56 sec. in favor of Marist.
Brian McGowan iced the game
with two foul shots for the final
score 91-85.
.
Captain Bill Spenla paced the
Red Foxes with 25 points and
14 rebounds, Ray Manning had
17 points, Joe Scott (18 points)
and Ray Clarke
(17
points).
* *
* * '-'
French in Algeria and So. East
Asia plus avoiding disturbance
of P~rtugal in any move that it
makes.
With the lack of an
independent, moral foreign
policy the U.S. has succeeded in
connecting itself with racist
policies, mass world armament
and oppressive colonialism. A
connection which is leading to
two trends in Africa which are
also the obvious two-fold results
of the Guinea invasion. First off,
a massive arms build up in Africa
including countries like: Zambia,
Tanzania, Nigeria Congo, Guinea
etc. Secondly the Black African
. nations are turning to the
com.munist block for aid,
technical assistance, trade
agreement and arms - to fight off
NA TO backed aggression. What
the U.S. must understand is that
Africa appreciates U.S. Aid, the
Peace Corps, dams, capital etc.,
but it above all demands positive
support against the fore~ . of
colonialism and racist pohc1cs.
* * * * *
,-,.1
I
!































































































































































































Jt
f~,
if
.
?
~
PAGE4
·
.
f?EBRU.ARY 4, 1971
.
l_
.
.
~
(
(
.
THE CIRCLE
-
Africatf
-
~tuderit~
·
Playw
.
right
.
.
..
.
.
a~iddy;
·
I'm s~d
'
of the

ui:G~rio~~it~~~
·
~~•~
.
E ~d
.
·
·
·
·
·
nigger
·
·
·
·
·
·
'
·
·
.
·-All·
rigbt
all
right!
·
You have
.
This
Wlek: ·
.
··
'
·
'Tour
Eiffll''
PE~~sftt~t-tu~i
5~~;.m~~i!
by
S
... GERRY
.
·
insinuous· smile.
.:.. . . . ; GAULES.
·.
..
.
.
.
· ...
.
-You're
from Senegal?.; .
.
·

I started proudly: .
.
.
-
St. Gerry, a student frcim Upp~r Volta in West Africa and now a were staring.at me j~t like at
.
.
-No, Upper Volta!;;,
.
.
,
-Our aricestois
D~
GAULES
resident of
Sheahan
Hall
Wµl offer 8D-:"African
·
Page'~ each
·
week
·
in
:
_
s
~
in
e
.
t
·
hj iJ.
·
g, n O
t
_
n
:
e
w ,
:
.
.
.:.uppCr!
upper!
_
-
In
·
-
Wha~
-~
is~,t
-
were.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
_
.
.
,...
·
"The Circle." Its purpose will be to present some aspects of the West
·
but ... strarige •. .I turned my
·
head Upper than something? .-
.
·
· ·
,
·
-Shit! Leave
us
alone!
First
of
·
African world. He
will
add each
.-
week a short play, written by around and around, and my
·
·
-Well, I said; it's our river's
a
11,
the
..
.
SEINE and
.
the
himself which
.
will
_
contain a moral or insight into this harsh world
.
eyes, a little afraid, stopped at a
name, ..
·
·
,
.
.
.
·
GIRONDE
·
do not concern you, ·
St
.
Gerry speaks French
·
fluently and though
his
English might little body, with blond hairs,
.
big
·
-ouffh! Rivers! And
if
:
you
.
they
are
our
--
laekes · and why
·
seem unfamiliar
.
at times, it
is
intelligible. St. Gerry adds that as an eyes,
·
fat cheeks and red little
'
had a sea, how will you call it
don't
·
you
'
speak about
.
your
African he believes in "coexistence pacifique" and hppes that none
·
mouth. It was the baby. When
then?
·
_
·
·
.
Upper and Lowest Voltas? hein?
of his plays which encompass many human problems will be taken as
·
our eyes
··
met
·
each other, from
-I don't
.
know sir!
I
.
did not
A fterw ar'1s,
-
you have

no
an offense to anyone.
·
So let's all welcome St. Gerry who appears his mother's arms, he jumped
-
as give the name!
·
·
ancestor J)e GAULE, they were
this week.
.
.

.
·
·
a monkey and started screaming
-Here
.
we are! What have you
OURS!
Why
don't you speak
"TOUR EIFFEL!"
·
wondered thoughtlessly how
·
can again:
.
·
_ given anyway? You never.give!
about yours? ... About 'the .way,
.
. .If you_iust
ca~ realize what
··
somebody,. even a baby,- cry in
-Mamma, Mamma, I'm afraid You even did not give your
who arc they? You.know.?
: ·
.
the word. PARIS means for a
such place. Then,
I
heard a of the nigger ..

.
.
.
countries's name!...
·
l
was caught.
I
always learned
West Afncan ... Above
-
~' thes~
·
·
mother's voice:
,
·
Thus, l was this ugly creature
· ·
When he pl u r a
Ii
zed
·
that· my ancestors were
.
De
fall?-ous "CHAMPS ~YSEES'
'.
·
·
-Ho; my
_
darling don't
·
be
so who scared this baby, and, this "countries" I understood that all
·
GAULES with
.
blond hair and
which hau~t our
-
~reams
.
.
.
N9w
;'
scared, it
·
won't do anything to "it
·
won't do anything to
·
the Africans
.
were involved.
I
was
blue eyes. I know nothing on my
try to realize
·
what-couldoe the
you! ... Ha? I thought

the poor you" ..

was
ine too?
.
.
.
.
·
1ost because Paris, FRANCE
is
·.
fathers' fathers, and about our
.
unrivaled
-
~'TOUR EIFFEL"
baby
is
scared at th~ "TOUR
·
.
Iwasjustsittingthere,withat supposed to
·
be the ceriter

of
-

Voltasldidn'tevenknowwhere
which defies the imagination!...
EIFFEL" anti the charming my right, a kind of old veteran h u m a n
n
y
w
.
it h
·
n
·
o
·
they are and how they
:
aie. My
~ ~as staring
_
at
.
Jhis won<ler,
.
Parisienn~
,
mother
Js
,trying to of the 1918 war, who could have discrimination.
·
.
·
·
·goodness!
·
Is it that PARIS? I
·
.
enJoymg a glass of menthe syrup
tranquilize
.
him?... After
·
a
been, a
·
,foinmandant or a
-Have you been in our school?
·
heard the baby again:
·
··
_
-
.
·
· ·
.
in
.
milk. The s_ky.was stretching
moment, the
·
baby started captain, anyway an officer, with
·
-Yes,
·
1
said
;
·
.
1
have beeri in
-Daddy
~
Daddy,
'.
tJienigger~Ws
over white and dirty fleecy

screaming again:; This
.
time it was a terrific beard, and who seemed . school!
•·
·
.
the nigger
,
..
\'
· . . .
·
clouds, and the.sunset through
the.fatherwhorepHed:
-
·
not yet to
'
understand why
-Howdolknowyoudon'tlie'f
-"I
know," replied the daddy
the slight mist. was:--creating a
. -D
,
on
't,
worry, he can do instead of Germans, he did not
. -Why should I?
with a filthy sneer,
"I
know, it's
kind of a splendor-around these
nothing to you!...

have to fight black· Niggars. At_
-With you "niggers, one never
.
him, the real one! the nigger!. .. "
clouds. Such a picture add to
-Well, I said to myself, it's not rnyJert, a skinny and bony grave know . .'.
·
·

The old veteran drew near to
such
a
wonder
as
the "Tour" a
about the "TOUR," but some digger who seemed to have not .
··
-You don't like niggers?
us
;
All
·
around were following
magic touch!..
.
ugly
.
creatures are scaring with found what, incase,hecoulddo
-Ha! Ha! Ha!
.
What's a
the conversation, He )Jemmed
While dreaminginfrontofthe impunity thfs innocent! to embellish such a dark question! .. .lf you have been in
twiceandsfated
:
·
"TOUR", trying to conceive the
-
Decidedly, this world has no body
.
... Finally, a very old priest school,
what
do you know in
-You are a republic, hein?
.
·
way it had been built, and why,
heart!... ·
who lam sure was amused, by
·
Geography?
.
·
-Yes
,
I said!
I
heard almost imperceptibly a
Btit ..
.1
just
.
realize at the same
his
smile, at God's originality in
-About what?
baby's tears next to me and
·
time, that some eyes around his creation! The baby came
-Anything!
CON'T.
P. 6 -
Col.
I
Chuck
Here
SURVIVAL
.
.
.
.
.
by
CHUCK MEARA
.
.
.
Rec e ri t attacks on Bill
We fail
to
discuss the actual case the individual
art,
not necessary
.
.
We are
all
involved Jn a race against time to cl
_
e
·
an up, 9ur
O'Reilly have C.!used me t.o
'
take
':
.
a:n~t
i,ur
j
feelings
·
(>ri
·
;
th~
.
case
;
because someone
·
else
.
is
always
.
,
environment. To save.it (and ourselves) from complete ann~hilation,
note
.
of a
·
much larger problem
:
dep
,
end
·
on whether'
·
we
·.··
think there .. Some w~ ch_arge
,
th,at
1'1!1
.
.
we must b~gin
.
to
:
act n
·
ow to reverse those destructive acttqn~. wl1i~h
.
>
:
i
;
·
•·.
·'
;.
,
;
/
t
.
~
a
_
t
<
:,
plagu.es "the
·
. Marisi
·
,
'
Berrigan _is:
··
3.
·
•·
"~onimie'~
'_
or
.

speakipg as a
,
naiye;1dealist b,ut1t•'(have
:
brought
,
us to
·
the
'
.:very .. brink of

disaster.
,
.
The
.
blow;,w:e
:
:liave
;:
~. :""
·.
·
·
\;_
.
,
;.
J
;
,.
::
·
_';'
,
o

'.
cointriunity

ana
.
. iiUact,
.
~rvades
·
\
He.o:ver·is~a:;''.pig.'!
,
Jf
.
we b.e}ieve
.
has

otten'

to
·

the poiiit
·
that-· d ·· 1
·
t
·
.
ur
·
·
·
, ,
·
'
·
o
·
·
n
·
me
·
t
·
·
·
t
·n1·
·ke
·
·
·
c
·
ancer
;
and J·ust ahheaoctor
·· ·
.
:
·
·
.
·1: .. '"-''
'--_:'·
, /
·
··1
.

..
·.•
.
'.
.

·
t
··
11
"
e
·

..
·
0
.
·
.
w
·
•·
,;
.
. •·
,
o·,
·
1e-
_
.,·.:
_
·
,
.
.
":Pl···~·-.n
•.
·g''a• ..
·
n
·

.
,r
•..
-
.
sc
.'
_'en
·
'"e
.
.. ·
.
·
.··
.
Th
·;f'
..
-
>
,
-
.
~
...
·
-
·.·
.
~
-
~
·
-,~
. ·.
·
a

n·.""-···._is·~.·,,a
. ·._
~
.
':'"'
,
,.
.
.
.
·
!ll
.
..
..
.
!tl
..
1:
.
;..
.
·
:
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:carinotpredicetlie
1
·
lioi.!r a·nd;-'miriute
,;
of~dei:nise
.'
by
,
his
tinfortim
'
a'te
:;:,:_;:;
1
_ · ,
.
·>:
:~:,'.:\
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(
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article 1s not mtended to be a
..
believe
_
he rs
gU!,ltY.:
a~d
.
·
,!n
,
:,J]Je
-1.q_!:tjvi~u~s
,,
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8!?.¥.1~
·
;t<?
·
J!ayc::
Jc:>
:,
.;
I?.~t!p~t
(
$(?
we
,
pin.n,pt
.,
predict exac~ly
,
when
,
w~ wHl
.
have
.
,p~ss~d
:
that.:
:i)
,
:
·· ·
·
·
defense
·
o
·
f Bill'.
'.ffe"°is"
able-
;
.
mori
:~
same:regard:1f
we
'
\1:i~w
,
Hoovet as
.
ac_ce.i>t

-t~e
i.°'.
res1>ons1bil!ty
.
f9r,
,
·
invisible point
,
beyond
,
which there 1s no
,
return for our
.
env1ronmenL

.
:
: •
so than
I
to substantiate any
.
a pig then Berrigan is obviously
t~~
that
·
·
·
af_~e
_
ct
,
·
.
~~~lll
_
,.
'
.
IJe
'
:
.
•.:
suffice.it to
say
that the time is mea:.ured in a few decad~s at most if
·
points
he
makes. The article
.
innocenbmd the case
.
lS
a fraud. time for folk heroes
lS
past
_
and
.
:
we continue
.
.
to
'.
degrade our earth at the present rate: Burwe believe
however does
·
concern itself
.
with
-

.
Why

has it gotten to this
-
we must
.
each be <>_11r
.
own. We

·
there is time to
·
win this race
,
and we offei: the following suggestions
response to BilCs article and
point? Well it is much easier to
·.
cannot depend ?n
:
others
·
to
to
·acqu_aint you
.
with a multitude
of
ways in which)ou,
as
an
response
,
generally
.
to
.
any
·
discuss
.
personalities than to stand up and
,
sa}'. wh~t "!".e
Vf8!1!
.
iJidividual; cari help to abate pollution
.
.
, .
positions
·
taken in America
.
,
disc
.
uss personal ideologies., to say.
·
If
,
we

beheve
.
in
·
·
'
·
·
· ·.
·
·
·
·
today.
.
.
although of course some would something we have to be able
fo
.
~-
w
·

a

.
er
.
.
I
,
.
We no longer attack beliefs or
.
c
h
a r g e t h a t t hey
·
are discuss it on its merits
._
and
·
· ·
·
.
· · · ··
·
-
·
·
ideologies in America but
.
we
interchangeable. However I without fea
,
r
·
from
·
being
PhQsphate in our detergents
'
and in <:hemical fertilizers are two
have become a nation of think the problem is a little attacked personally
.
· major source{ of pollution
in
our rivers and lakes. Phosphates
·
character assassins. We have
.
deeper. When we build these
·
*
* *
*
*
·
encourage the growth
·
of algae ill
·
water; and.this overabundance
·
reached the point whereto take
.
scapegoats we are also building
ulUmately robs the lake
.
or river of oxygen
,
causing fish and plant
a position on an issue is
fo
make
heros. By attacking personality
FOY -
from
1
life
to
.
die. Use low or no-phosphate, biodegradable detergents or _
yourself vulnerable fo
.
attack not
on the right we must al~o create proportions but rather
it
is being soaps, such as: COLDWATER ALL, DUZ
SOAP, IVORY
FLAKES,
·
on what you have said but on
something on the left, who we designed for the use of 1600 IVORY SNO\Y;
:
LUX FLAKES;
.
~EARS
ENZYME
LAUNDRY
either why or how you have said
.
can
.
follow and worship
as a
people
.
This complex is still a
D
ETERGEt~T
;
WHIRLP()OL LAUNDRY
'
,
DETERGENT,
:
AND
it
:
The response to -P'Reilly's
man-god
.
These folk-heroesare few years off and to be sure ECOLO-G,
·,
. .
.
.
,
. .
.
. .
·
.
article is a case in
-
point
:
Rather
our answers to
all
the problems
.
.
there
.
will most probably lie
.
Use
'
less
.
water to reduce
-
the load oil sewage
'
treatment plants.
than discussing the merits
pf
They provide the answers, they other changes on campus before
·
Repair leaky
·
faucets
.
and ho~es .
.
Put bricks
in
your toilet tank
.
Bill's position, people attack
him
provide the relaxation and
·
we
see the completed complex. Rep6rt garbage
·
or sewage you see dumped near
or
in a stream or
as
·
a fascist, racist and
everything else. We have our
lake
·
to youd
_
ocal conservation officer or h~altp. official.
_-
.
war-monger
..
Nationwide
.
the heroes and they will do what is
DRAFT-
from
I
.
p ,
·
.
-
.
·
.
· ·
Berrigan controversy is a case
i
n
best Confidence determination students on the
.
draft _through
OPU
3 10ft
.
.
.
point for both the left ari~ right
.
and responsibility on the part of high school programs
·
.
is an . Ove,rpopulation is the -ultimat~ _ pollution problem. Unless the
excellent idea.
IJ
provides world achieves a stable (zero growth) population
,
all other efforts to
·
Notes From The Files
The
If
Man
Large scale ballahoving -
lavander streamers bold on the air,
"Come out!" It's easy
when it's loud and crowded
mindless. Be a homosexual
alone - anxious or hungry or in
love. Alone: in your bed
,
in your
fear and hope.
Be
a
homosexill!I alone
.
Alone:
know
the masks;
learn
to
..
patronize yourself.
Don't ask too much of your
friends
Don't need
·
These is to.o much fear already
:
There is no room for that which
you bring. No room in
god
,
no room in love, no room
in the natural world. No room.
In
your
mind, no room.
aoset
yourself. The suffering
makes the act more real.
Ooset
yOlirself.
Be a homosexual. Alone
-
1971
videbemus
valuable information concerning preserve the environment will have been in
vain. This
goal can be
the existing enlistment
,
requried achieved if.the ayerage family size is}imited to two children.
If
more
service, and deferment laws of children

.
are
.
desired; ~onsider
.
'.
adopting.

If you are unsure
of.
thl: Selecti".e
.
Service Systeljl, birthcontrol methods
,
call Planned Parenthood or a similar agency
winch surpnsingly enough
,
are for advice. Th~re is, of course, not'1iJ1g trivial about deciding to limit
not known by many of our own family size but such a decision reflects concern and Jove
.
for all
students
.
.
.
.
children and assuresthem a place
in
the future ...
,
-
.
·
.·.
.
.
TRACK & FIELD
TRACK & FIELD
ATTE~TION
.
.
WE NEED RUNNERS. AND FIELD EVENTS MEN~ COME TO
PRACTICE MONDAY TO THURSDAY,
10:00
P.M.,
DONNEL-
LY HALL.
.
Feb .
.
6 - C.T.C.
Relays -
Queens College
Feb.
20 • Dual
Meet - Queens vs. Marist at Queens College
TRACK & FIELD
TRACK & FIELD
























































































































































FEBRUARY
4
/
1971
·"
111ECIRCLE
.
CIR
.
CLE
EDITORIALS
i. .

. ·_ •.•
. COMMON
.
SENSE
·
·
.
:
Iii
·
}
fttiubl~
->
·
·
,
'
'"Co~~o/ S~~s~;,
is a
ni~~thly
:
ne~ipap~r circulated by sev~ral
members
.
of the
Poughkeepsie community. Its purpose
is
to educate
.
the
,
people
·
living in this area to the problems which exist
in
the
·
nation and more important locally. The
:
political persuasion of
.
the
staff is "radical" in that "Common Sense" offers realistic
.
practical
and
.
ne<;essary
·
reforms to the residents of this area
.
Among the
several areas written abouthave been the school crisis
,
prison reform
and the fight for a livable environment.
,
·

·
.
.
·
·
·
As the result of the January issue of "Common Sense" several
members of the staff were named
in
a civil suit which claimed that
the paper was obs
.
cene and should not be circulated.
·
Since the
question of
.
obscenity
·
has become a
·
moot point it is necessary to
look for another reason for the action against the paper
.
·
·
-
.- ..
One of the individuals named in the suit- was Austin Bently
_
a
teacher in the Arlington school district .
.
Mr.
_
Bently has)ong been
a:
·
thorn in the side of his superiors and
.
the}o
_
cal American Legion
.
His
·
crinj.e:
.
he cares about his students
,
he
is
a good
:
teacher
1
,
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
Action is now
·
being taken
,
bY. the American Legion ~0J1ave Bently
remove
.
d fr:om his
:
posftio~ .
.
The a'Ction ]las
.
been i'nitiat~d by the
"Americanifaticm
:
C<>niinittee" of the Legion, the tone 9f which is
repressive. and reminiscent of Sen. Joseph
·
McCarthy
.
.
and the
. infamous "Palmer raids."
·
.
.
. •·
.
.
·
· ·
The civil suit is not a well-disguised instrument to attack Bently
.
and "Common Sense." And .the American Legion
is not a stranger to
such
.
·
tactics. We recognize the fact that the
_
staff of "Common
Sense•~ is a Socratic gadfly on the back of the jack
-
ass known as
Dutchess County. But to allow the enemies of "Common Sense" to
be ~ctorious would be a decided loss for Dutchess County.
We ask you to lend whatever
l
telp you can (moral financial or
otherwise) to the staff of "Common Sense." lt'is aecessary that the
type of muck-raking and activism practiced by "Commofl Sense"
continue in Dutchess County.
·
*
·
***
·
*
letters To
The
·
Edit.ors
Hello, Slave!
Remember the draft? Remember that card you carry in your
pocket that says
·
you are the property of the United States military.
(We realize that many of you are not draftable but if one
is
not free
none are).
.
How does it feel to be a slave. Do you enjoy being potential
-
·
cannon fodder
.
Does the thought of killing someone upset you. Does
the thought of dying
.
before you are twenty-five bother you.
.
·
Each person must react to the draft in his own way
.
At the point
of induction y'ou are alone. No one shouting, "Hell no! We won't
go!" No friends. Just you and the military.
There are many things that can be done to combat the draft.
Resistance. Emigration. Underground. Jail. Also you can work
through the political process to remove the onus of the draft.
.
There is ano
·
.. 1er tactic: "conscience mail." Write to your local
board. Ask them questions about their work. Draw parallels of their
·
work to the Nazi functionairies. Challenge the basic premise that
what
.
they are doing is
right
or "only a job.
"
Tell those innocent
secretaries the disaster they are allowing to happen
.
.
*
*
*
* *
·
<e+
CIRCLE
Sal Piazza, Joe Rubino,
·
Ann Gabriele, Janet Riley,
Peggy Miner, Frank Baldascino, Paul Tesoro, John
.
Tkach, Bernie Brogan, Sheila languth. Rich
Brummett.
The above names are those people who have contributed to
this
week's CIRCLE, and do not appear in a byline.
PAGES
St
·
•1
·
1
·
-
.
community
.
Mr. O'Reilly
_
is a
films in the theatre because the
T
F k
L
·.
,
.
I
:
fine
.
and witty writer who has
distraction of insecure comedy
WO
a es
·.
a ter
.
'
Outr
·
aged.
c
.
·..
.,,::
,
_.
'
-
~t;.'~oi:s.-i~(~~titl~;~
:
-
~~;:~ci~fro!
11
~t~hi~
"
the
:
!:~~n~
::•

_
·
.
.
.
,-
.

: :
;,
·.·
.
.
.· . . . .
"
::> .

·
· .
. ·
:.
.-
·
:.
:)
,
_,,· .. ·
.
.

t

,
,:'
~-
:
,
;_::
:
;;
4
,
nd.er
_
st~nd )~
.
,:WhY.
,
;
s
b,e
.{
rij
,
\lst
,
, ,
try~g
.to
•say
'
;.,A[so;

,
a
'(
'liord
{
?f
'·J·· ; .. ;•
w
·
·
h
·::·.'·
..
:
..
·
,
.. , .. , .. . ··M
'
·
'·.

:~
'

i
·
·
c
·
'
o...- ·n·-"':c•·
'
·'e·•.·,,,
, ·

···
-
~
.::..L,
.,
.
·
:
Editors
;'
l'h
.
eJ:;ir~Jy,:
.
,
\:,
;>
i
i
,
;
;
,',
(J
,
always,;belit:tle pe9i;>le
,;
and
,
,
nqt:
,
.thanks t9
,
all-it}ie nice
.
people
i
1
_
n.
.:
:
.·Q.I
.
.
..
:
·
o
·
m -
~
.. ~•:.•
:
a
Y
'
.
:.
·.
.
.
.
. . ...
.
.
:
·
/
y
am
i
·w·iitirig•:tcf
'ei<pfe~
'
s
J'
my
)'
-o(f~f.
/
aiiy
,
tli~n~
·;'
C<?nstiifo!i've

/
to
. .i;t
~e
;
Fire5!de'
'
l.'.Quris1
:
1~sfs.un~~y
\
.
.
:
. . ~..
.
.
..
:
.;
.
-
.
,. '
: . "-
.' '
'
. .
·
"
.
! . ,
.
.
.
.
.
;;
gratitude to·
:,.
those
'"
of: my
·
the commuruty

. Mr. O'Reilly lias ·mght. It was both encouragmg
.
·
-
·
·
·
coUeagues and students
who
;
:
a
tt
a
_
c
~
e d
·
·
eye rybody
,
·
and
·
.
a~d
-
perso~ally relevant
.
,
All
.-
,
._
,..
;
.
.
t;y
JOE
-
RUBINO
.
publicly
.
or
.
privately
/
.
rose
_
so everythmg on_campus.
If he does things must pass.
.
.
.
This
~lumn may oe iooKea at
in
.
many ways
;
i:lut
It
ts
mten<1ed as
.
,
gallantly to
my
defense after the
.
not agree w!th what happens
Kevin Dwyer
·
an editorial reply to all those who have vocally displayed their
·
publishing
·
by the Circle of its why
'
~oes
_
nt h~
:
try
-
to
.
do
·
·
·
dissatisfaction with
.
Mr. William O'Reilly's column concerning a Mrs.
self-titled "Outrageous'' column sometlung a~~ut
_
it .
.
-~o me, he
.
Dutchess
·
Waste
Landleft, or
.
with
.
Mr. O'Reilly's writing in general
,
·
or more
of January 21,
l9~L
-
.
.
.
has prov~m
_illS
,mab~ttr to be
specifically, with Mr. O'Reilly.
.
.
J confess that 1t would have con~tructive._ He Jlasn t
5•1
?Wn to
Disposal
To Dr. Louis
,
C. Zuccarello: Though
J highly respect and regard
been easy for me, out of the Manst an)'.t)ung ~f value smce he
·
your opinion, your letter was basically irrelevant to Mr. O'Reilly's
anger and hurt aroused by this started wntmg this year
.
. ·
Dear Sir
article. First of all, his satire is just that: satire, and hardly an attack.
"verbal violence", so easily and
·
·
.
Donald puffy
.
Being a member of
.
·
the
-
Secondly, and most importantly, his satire conce1:1ed !vfrs. Landleft's
generally identified as being-
· .
·
.
.
co u
11
t y-widc Solid Waste classroom habits and was hardly a character assassmatton.
directed against me, to reply in Tome Editor.
Disposal Stt1dy Steering · You ask why Mr. O'Reilly said nothing of her work w!th foreign
kind. I am glad now that,
_
with
.
Good newspapers take the
.
CommitLee there are a few facts students. I will give you the same answer as before
,
that
IS,
that t_he
the
·
generous help and support of
.
trouble to correct
.
misspelled that appeared .in your Survival article concerned
·
only her in the classroom and not her entue
these
.
friends, I was able
to
.
.words in letters to the editor
.
(It
column in January
.
21 Circle that existence
.
If
someone did a satire about my work on The Circle
·
·.
desist'. Their manifestations of seems to be a gentleman's way
I would like to clarify
.
would you ask why no one mentioned my work in App
a
lachia?
good
·
will have succeed
.
ed
in of doing things.) But the Circle
First the i)urpose. of the study
·
To Mr. James E
.
Daly: Concerning your reference to Mrs. Landau,
giving a positive turn to
.
an editors wifa complete lack of is to come up with a both you and I know your self-admitt~d ulte1or motiv_es
.
otherwise highly
_
destructive gentlemanliness
·
not onl
y
left comprehensive treatment and Concerning your reference to Coach Ron
.
LeVIne
,
don t you !ealtze
incident
.
·
·
words misspelled but boldly
disposal plan
.
for Dutchess that although Mr
.
O'Reilly has a certain_attitude towards LeYl;ne
.
he
.
.
In
_
particular, I think of the
·
pointed them put with "sic'';

I
County up to the year I 990. This has a certain
.
respect and regard for his teammates. An
·
~rt1de at
student who said to me
.
, from
,
think that was
·
very sick of them
.
will just not
·
result
.
in another midseason would have been very damaging to a team workmg on an
the depths of
his
own life in
Pun intended.
·
· . ·
report but will come up with a 8-0 season.
·
·
.
gi1etto status: "What is there to
·
The editor's note that the plan to serve the county for the
You also say that
Mr.
O'Reilly uses The Circle as a sanctuary to
do about people, Mrs. Landau
,
letters against Bill O'Reilly were next 20 years. The
1969
study avoid personal confrontation. Well, let it be known to all now t~at
except to forgive them." And
printed only after receiving ltis
prepared by the Planning Board
Mr.
James E. Daly sat in the office of The Circle for two hours with
·
from this evidence
.
of human
permission was another sick is not being duplicated
·
bi.1t used
Mr.
Sal Piazza Mr. O'Reilly and myself and voiced no displeasure
compassion, born of suffering, I
statement.
If
BiU can
.
attack by the engineer to come up w
i
th with O'Reilly,' after which he retreated to his room
to
write his
drew an especial comfort.
any
·
one ~ie wishes, in any way he the bes_t plan for the future
.
letter. Speaking of a lack of honesty, Mr. Daly ...
. _.
·
Sincerely
,
wants, them we should not need one have no idea as to the
To Manfred Hall: I say nothing .
..
For his uninformed opini9n and

Carolyn C. LaP:tau
his
·
permission
·
to defend
:
these economic logistics or
.
even the lack of intelligibility allow
his
letters to die quickly
.
·
·
people.
:
1
·
just

wonder how various possibilities when one
To Mr. Peter O'Keefe: See above reply to Dr. Zuccarello.
·
·
cliquish the
·
editorial
·
staff is attempts to apply recycling ideas
To Fr. Leo Gallant
:
I say to him what I have said to him so many
·
getting.
·
.
to the geographic area
.
"
times in the past: Please look before you leap. You wonder 'YhY
:
Dear Editor
With respect
to
Bill O'Reilly
'
s
column on Mrs. Landau, I would
like
to
inake one request of the
Circle. In the interest of fair play
.
would you assign one
·
of your
editors to write an article on one
of the many contributions Mrs.
.
Landau has made to the
·
College
_
Community. I am thinking
specifically of her work with
foreign students.
.
·
Such an article _might do more
than
a11
·
the explanations
in
the
world to undo some of the
damage caused whenever any
human being is_ personally
attacked
in
the public forum.
Peter O'Keefe
Dear Editor,
Please let me
go
on record as
being opposed to Mr.O'Reilly's
recent attacks on people
involved with the Marist
·
Personally, I find Bill's satire
-
Now, for my third
.
point
,
the
nobody on the football team has spoken up to defend Mr. Levine.
gentle and no one should be hurt officials of Dutchess County do
Well Father your answer lies within your own question. Doesn't the
by it. But
his
attack on Coach not look at solid waste as
fact that no ~me has spoken up tell you something?
Levine was uncalled
for.
If Bill something to get rid of - to
You haven't been here long, Father, but for years people have
had
·
guts he would have mailed it

dispose of - or to buy. They are
been saying about Mr. Levine what Mr. O'Reilly has said, and
_
worse
·
to Ron and not publish it for all looking at every possible
much worse, but until O'Reilly has spoken
-
up no one has had
to see .
.
Ron Levine (lid not solution
to
the solid waste
enough nerve t.o say it in print.
·
deserve
it·
and I'm surprised problem
.
County Executive
·
You call
it
a lack of courage on his part
.
Well
,
Father
.
as long as
other football players did not David Schoentag is not afraid to
·
rm
in the habit of pointing out inconsistencies
,
why is it that in the
come to his defense.
take a step forward and to lead
three instances when you have felt displeasure with The Circle or its
Some people think that be the pack. Just this past week a
policies you have not come to me and have instead written a letter.
completely frank is a quality. In group from the steering Please do not set double standards! (For those who question my
my book, frankness is a quality committee went to Cleveland to
standards, I have previously spoken to Fr. Gallant).
only when it's charitable
.
.
look at a project recycling
To Mr. Donald Duffy, the latest to hop on the bandwagon: You
Sincerely center. There is more to the
should be happy to know, Mr. Duffy, that we have put you on
Fr. Leo Gallant. recycling problems than meets
record as being opposed to whatever you are opposed to.
If
you
Chaplain the eye. This fact is evident in
want to know what Mr. O'Reilly has done constructively for the
Prefers
Appreciation
Friends-
Two tbing.5: l think we should
all be cool while we're watchinl'!
that there is no
fuil scale
campus I will refer you to Mr. Thomas Hackett
.
literary editor of the
recycling operation in effect in
yearbook, to whom O'Reilly has given ~uc~ tim,e and effort. to Mr.
the United States to date.
Frederick Lambert, for whom Mr.
0
Reilly ,1as drawn up the
The study will come uri with
campus' first Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse: or to Mr. Piazza
the best plan for the people of
and myself
,
for outside of our typists
,
he has been the most involved
this county, and
will
look at
person on the Circle this year.

To Mr. O'Reilly: l wonder, do Art Buchwald or Al
Capp
share
your worries?
CON'T. P. 3-Col. 2

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tJjj~f;
:{t;~
l
PAGE6
nIECIRCLE
FEBRUARY 4, 1971
' ;
..
c.u~e.
ELECTIONS
Applications for- nomination
to positions
on
the College
Union Board of Managers should · -
be submitted to the Campus
Center Director's Office. Each
applicant should submit
his
name for more than one office.
From the applications for
nominations a Selection
Committee will choose two
candidates for each office. -Any.
person choosing . to run
in
opposition to the two candidates
nominated by the Selection·
Committee for each office must
declare himself within
(1 )
one
week of the-. Selection
Committee's· announcement and
must support his application
with a petition signed by at least
20% of the. membership of the
College Union.
·
Applications for nomination
must be submitted· to the Office
of the Campus Center Director··· :
or Ralph Cerulli . (C625) by
5
p.m. Friday; Feb. 5th.
.,
The Selection Committee will . -
make and post its nominations
by
5
p.m. on the.· following
Thursday, Feb. 11th. All
· petitions of candidacy for those
who wish to oppose the people
nominated by the Selection
Committee must
be
ftled by 5
. p:m.··'~n Mo~~Y, Feb.1. 15th:
A.
. primary,'
if ·
i:tecessary,
must,
be
held on the following \Yed., 'Feb.' .. ,
. 17th.·: . · ,
·.
·
.; ..
·:_s· __ --
. _. ·Active cai"Qpaigning"shall
begin ·
_'.at S p:m.:on Wed., Feb.17th.
. ., - ;
Elections
are
to take place on·
Thursday, · Feb.-
25th
and· the . .
· ··
riew · Board of Managers . shall ·
,. · · · ·
take. office on the·
first
day· of-·.
March. . . . . .
.
:Positions available are· the· ·
fo~lowing: President -of the ·
. Board,_he.is the exec:;utive officer': ·
and ex-officio member. of .
all ·
· _C.ollege Union· committees; .
.Vice~President, who. -sh!l,11 t~ke
over the duties of the President·
: in his ·absence and performs all ·
du ties so designated - by the .
President; Se~retary, who
will. · ' .
handle .
all
correspondence for . : - ·
the, Board .and keep files ·arid ·
minutes. of· all Board activities- . .
-
and meetings; Treasurer, ·who ·is•· '.. · .. •
responsible for formulating the·. · · ·
-budget and· keeping all-.fiiiancfal
·
·
records of the Board: :-
· . . · · · .
S-tudent. Governme·nt·
Representative is the -·liaisori
. between_ the C.U.B. and the
Student_· Government appointed
.
by th_e Student Government.
CON'T. P.
7
DON CR.A WFORD, a folk singer rising to stardom, whose appearances with
Marist's Coffee House circuit have affected many area people.
_ Often featured in th~ C~U.B.'s Coffee ·House" is ROBIN WALSH, a student
_from
Vassar
College.
·
·
·
-
-
.
EIFFEL - from 4
-Like
us, hein? Republic like
FRANCE!...
.
Everybody _
went laughing.
I
was surprised. There was nothing
laughable ...
?
-Do · you have ambassadors?
asked the veteran?
-Of course!
.
- -That's what I thought ... Where
are they?
-A few everywhere, I said.
-Ho yes? You have one in the
UN I
bet?
-Sure!
-What
is
he doing in the UN?
-He votes! ·
.
-What does he vote.on?
-The resolutions!. .. ·
-Really ...
All around were laughing
again. The daddy of the little
animal ·who caused all this story
mumbled:
. -Niggers in the UN!...To
vote! ... Ha! this sacred century!
A prostitute at her turn drew
near to us, and with a kind of ·
disagreeable accent she
meowed!
-It is said you have ten wives
by man? How do you content all
of them? This time it was a
crowd around me which · was
twisting with a guffaw.
-Well,
I
said, such question
from you seems to me very
strange-she blus}_led.
The waiter came with a tray
on which there were one dish
of
vegetables, and. one dish of
chicken. This last was mine. The
*
* **
*
first for the veteran, who
literally grasped the dish with
two ·hands and started to browse
it. I took calmly my chicken and
made the first cut with a
leg. lri
Africa, we like the marrow. By
this fact, we don't save the
bones. So, I was grinding my
bones; That made the crowd
curious. The old veteran, very
infuriated, stopped browsing and
yelled:
~In your country, what do you
give to your dogs?
.
-I never had a dog I replied,
but for our goats, · the same
vegetables as yours! · ·. ·
· He blushed as an April . dying
sun and with him the daddy and
all
around. The daddy wanted to
support him. - ·
·
-pon 't you know - that
vegetables have-
iron
for the
body?
-Don't you know that marrow
· has phosphate for the body?
I
cl~sed the daddy's mouth,
but
~
was on the p9int to blow
up with
all
this. Then came
OUSMANE this time,
a
Senegalese. Immediately with
our common dialect, I told him:
-Ousmane, wa songiiem we!
Ne tampib we! Shaptoans•
gu'kamb' data me dimam wa
kam! That means literally:
Ousamane, help me. These shrew
mice want to eat me
as
butter!
Ousmane
is
a very very big black
fat
strong nigger who has never
been receptive to the so-called
European civilization. He
growled:
-Bass rayous ne Ousman! That
in~ans literally, leave. these rats
with the Ousmane!... So; he sat
down, pushed
his
stomach up,
and noisily, he belched as a
Polish. -Hamoo arrr!
The old veteran stopped
eating. The daddy got up.
Ousmane then unbottoned . his
shirt, uncovering ..
a
very
ballooned big and black ball.
From the crowd a shout of
indignation gushed.
Hooooo!
Then, holding his breath,
Ousmane threw a kind of
distressing bark:
It
was. the
chaos! _ In less than one minute,
the ·place was empty with
nobody around. Thus, Ousmane
said to me:
My .friend, here it is! This was
the war shout of my tribe.
It
still
has some effect hein? ... You see,
with
all
these whities there is
only one way:
BE
yourself like
in
the -village. Belch in public,
shreik like at odd
in
the tribe.
If ·
for them it's against their
"Politesse," for
us in
Africa it is
not why do. we have to opte for
their politeness; Be like in the
tribe of the village, and they are
convinced that you are YOU!
Now, let's go.
Till home, I was twisting with
a
real
guffow .. .I
.
I'll
never forget Paris,
Ies '
Champs· Elysees, and above all,
the «TOUR EIFFEL" ...
*****
*****
A -
rare
Ph?tog:raph of SANT A CLAUS, taken only minutes
before he fainted after the presentation of a hot. black leather
whip
t~
his little helper.
'
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FEBRUARY 4,
1971
1HECIRCLE
.
·
PAGE7
p





.
..
Mid-Hudson

COalitiOn
.
For
.
·peace
P.O.
·Box
i84 C
.
.
. Marist College
.
. .
Poughkeepsie, New YorkJ2601 ,:
··
·
·
.
·To The Students And Faculty of Marist College -
. .A
reign under Emperor Nero proved to be destrµctive in many ways. While
·
Rome
was under his rul~ he destroyed
.
part of the
-
city aD:d placed the
·
blame on a group of
.
peace loving people called Christians. In· today's world the:-~ is a.similar person who is
attacking
all
peace oriented groups composed of-pers9ns from vatj.ous walks of life and
·
forcing them into twentieth century catacombs.,.
:.
Mr.
J.
Edgar Hoover.
·
On January
.
12, 1971
·
six nuns, priests,
·
aild
.
professors were
.
indicted by
.
the
Han:isburg Grand Jury
on
conspiracy and kicinap
'
charges. These allegations to blow up
Federal buildings ~n 'Wasb,ington and to kidnap presidential aide; Henry Kissinger is just
another
of
·
Mr.
Hoover's
:
attempts to bring peace activists and groups to their demise.
·
_.
There.is a way to help prevent groups and perso-ns dedicated to the cause of peace
.
· .
.
·from
-
being suppressed.
·
The Mid-Hudson Coalition For Peace
is
an attempt to
bring
together all
.
sympathetic persons and groups into
a
large area body which will work for
.
a quick e
·
nd to the
war
in
Southeast
Asia
and
to
help build
a
.
more united and civil
America.
·

. -
,
· .. ·At
.this
time our primary concern is. to give our support to the Harrisburg Six
.
.
·
-
·
. · through
-
the
·
Washington's Birthday Defense Committee
(a
group
·
originated-
in ·
New
· -
-
York City to coqrdinate publicity and fund raising for the defense of those indicted by
the
..
Grand Jury,) by informing area residents and students about the existing situation
·
and also by working to raise funds for the defense.
.
,
·
The
·
Mid-Hudson Coalition is soliciting interested persons and
·
groups who will
·
voluntarily work for peace.
All
interested persons are asked to write or contact:
Cornelius (Neil) Draves
.
.
··.
P.o
·
.
13'
9
~
.
t~~c _·
.
. ,
_
.
_
_
>
...
:;
-

~:
~
.
_
...
.. : ...
!Y!c11t~t£~):!_9.~,--
·
.. :.,._·
:
:
•...
.
:
c;,
··
..•
,
,.
;

..
·
,
;
.
·,::
.
-,.
-
·
·:,
;
...
.
,-{i:rt;-
PtfuijJ:.iK~ft5~ie/Ne·~
·
Y6fk.
,
l260J
.
,.
i
P.lt:
9J4 4
'
54~
_
9909-(Rrit~
·
916)
~
.
.
.
.-
·
.
.
'
. , . . . . . . - , , - -
-
,;,,,, . . . . n:-:e,- .-,,,
-=-=
1"trrz
'
. . . . . . . .
.
.
.
.
Yours truly,
Cornelius (Neil) Draves
J.
Edgar Nero
. I saw Nero sitting on Capital Hill
Wondering When he should light the match
,
Anxiously wanting to destroy the city and its groups,
Then politelY. blame the"Cllristians and their cohorts.
It
was amusing to catch his VibS,
The most insensitive person could easily pick them
up.
I saw him se.nd out his battalion of FBI -
The Emperor, his men and their asinine lies.
And
tlie
.
whole legion of obedient Americans turned to
·
Their unofficially acclaimed king and recited their
.
Pledge of Allegiance.
The throned king asked what other countries he could
Douse with napalm and karosene.
Then I saw a six winged seraph coming towards him
·From.Harrisburg with their triumphant message.
.
And from Georgia I could hear the trial of the Slaughter
of Innocents pass by without any major rebutal -
The initial stink was made. but that was all.
Then Nero narrated how he intended to deminish us
Something he could never do.
.
.
.
Then from various high points came the call of the poor
But he retorted that it was not his case and to tell
Someone else .
.
. and the same echo all over Capital Hill
Until caught
by
.-
.-
group of peace and civil actiiists
In their Eastern catacombs.
Cornelius
J.
Drav~
C.U.B. -
from
6
.
Five committee chairmen
positions for the Social
Committee
,
Lecture Committee.
Coffee House Committee:
Cultural Committee. and Film
Committee. Each committee
chairman is responsible for
arranging programs in his area
and directing
them.
A
faculty
Representative will
also be voted on by tlic entire
community and the faculty in
turn
is requested lo v,
,
tc ,,n
student candidates
.
'
**
"'
*,le
..
.
I
I
..
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-
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I
I
·
,.
i
.•
·
-
11IE CIRCLE , ..
Two nights ago the Red Foxes charity stripe. ' .
·:
-
·•·

week with' victories over ]{ing's
traveled to. Bloomfield, New
In the first overtime period~
·
(N.Y.)
ancl'.Moriinotith College •
.
Jetsey to
.
face Bloomfield
.
Ray
,
Clarke
·
scored
all
.
four
of
-
-
Against King's
·
·
the Red Foxes
College in
an
important C.A
.
C.C.
·
Marist's
'.
points to
.
deadlock
t}le
"
·
.
upped their league record to S-0.


conference game. Bloomfield ·contest
.
72-72.
:
In
the
.
second
.
It
-
was
.
a
weU
·
·
baianced attack,
,
came into the game with a 174 extra
.
session

Bill Spenla hit a which
·
saw 6 men in double
record·.and
a
4~1
league record.
foul
shot to
.
send Marist into
a
·
figures.
-'.
_
·
-
·
·
-
(Their only
:
league loss was to 82-791e~d-
_

.
·
,- _
-
1
Marist
·.shot"·
out quickly to
the
>
Red Foxes earlier in the
.
Bloom&eld's Dave Wright got
:
take the
·
lead at halftime S7-33.
season74=-Sl).
·
.
-
.•---
.
_
hot and
·
scored five
·
of
.
:-
Joe
:
Scott ..
.
10
:
,.
poirits, 6
·
.
The
Foxes
caine into the game
-
-
Bloomfield~s
last
·
7
points
i
to
.
;
rebowids and Ray' Maruµiig
·-
l 0
·
_
with a
·
13-3 mark and s-0
,
·
in
.
bring victory to, the Deacons.
· .
-

·
points, 6
:
rebounds; led the
_
C.A.C.C. play.
:
up
until
;
.
this
.-
-
Marist
.
wasled by
_
Ray Clarke

atta
_
ck
·though
:,_
only playing
.
g~me · ~loom field• was
·
_
rated
.
(24 pts);
~
Spenla (21 pts;
.
14
,:about·
.
-
half ·of the ..
,
period.· The
· .
number two
·
in the nation
.
.in'
rbs.), M3J?ning (18 pts), and Joe
·
second half saw
,
mo.re
of the
.
·
.
~mall college
.
defens~; giv:irig
.
up Scott
(1
Opts, 12 rbs.).
·
. · .
.
- ·
;
same
with the Red Foxes leading
only 60.9 points
a
gifme.

·
. ·

High
man for
·
Bloomfield
,
was
·.
92-:s2
·
with
·
'
8:3
_
;3 remaining. At
'
The game was close in
,
the
first
Jim Kroll with 33 points.
..
·
this point King's
;_
College
.
half with Bloomfield going into
.
·
The loss
.
cut Marist's
win
resorted to
a man
to
man
full
the locker room up 36-30. Ray
.
streak at nine which wasanew court press. With
;
the· second
·
Clarke led the
·
attack thus far school record. Marist puts their team in the game
·
f9r Marist. The
with 12 points.
·
.
•.
.
·
.
10 game home win streak on the
-
Purple Knights cut the score by
.
Marist
..
came qri
.
strong in
.
the line in
a
_now imp?rtant CACC
-
twenty points. The
final
score
.
.
·
·
second half to tie the game at 68 game agamst D9wling Saturday
-
was 109-89 .
.
The Red Foxes
.
.
.
.
all.
-
Ray Manning paced
.
the
·
night at Lourde,s.
- _
-
_
._
_
_
--
_
.
we!e l~d
_
bY,
-
Joe
_
.
Scott
(18
-
.
.
squad in· this
·
half ~ith thirteen_
-
-
-
T~e Varsity: Bas~etball Tea1!1
.
porn ts,
12
-
.
reb_ounds); ~ay
.
·
.
points. eleven coming from the continued their wm streak th1S
Clarke ~16 point~). Ray Manning
• '
·
' .
·
-
·
·_
·
.
(14
pomts,
11
rebounc!,s); I:;es
_
:
·
Chenery
(12
points);
Bob
Ullrich
(12 points); and Jim Cosentino
· .
_
·
-01
points). Captain Bill
·
_
Spenla
.
.
grubbed
11
rebounds.
-
.
Glen
~-
Jacobsen led King's College with
·
20 points.·

·The
Red Foxes returned home
to face Monmouth
·
College.
;
.
Monmouth, perennial KA.I.A.

·

,
_
District
-
31
Champion, came into
,
.
·

/
tl)e gam
_
e
,
with
a
-~
12~6
j:ec:ord:
FEBRU~! 4/1971
.
·
.
The
,
Hawks at the time were the
·
:
:,
:
.
_
_
_
.
.
.
_
.
.
:.


.
Nwribe:t;
.. ,.:l>rebollriding'
team
_
in
<:
:
·
:
., .
Fi;shmairJoHN DILLON
.
batdes-t~o Albany
St. leape~
for
~~
i~~~~~
!if
il
lll
$
l~
!t
"
lil'
:
,
~-.~
c
dm
..
.
:
i;~~1~~i/
·
~~:{1/
.
i1M
·
Fosti:il
;
-'.
·
~~~l
i
,i~i-01i~
;
·
giving
instttictioris
.
to
'
members
of
his squad

. -
<·
: - -
·
.

-
.
'
_:
'
•.
•··
·

-

··:
-
.:
'
'iffse
lo
th~
?
occaSi;~
_.
_
_
.
·
-
;
·
.,

··
.-:·
.
.-.,
_,
<
'
'
.
second
..
co
_
nsecutive .
:•
important \Yins. Against Nyack . t~iriei
'
in ..
another
_
exceptional
. wee:\{; Junior Guar~
i
Ray Clarke,
~
Missionary (;ollege, _
Ray
lecf
all
-
.
performance, this time · playing
.
was
.
selected to
.
tlie
_
-
E.C.A;C.
·
.
·
scorers with
.
22 points
'.
although
:
aggressive
,
defense as
·
well
as
his
·
team of:the week
-
(D
_
ivisiqriIII)
.
·
"
he only played alittle more than
_
usual balan1.:ed offense. Scoring
R,ay
:
is
the only player in
,Marist
·
half
_-
the game
.;
:
Besides being
-
17
points and holding his man,
-
~asketball
hisfory
ever to receive
leading scorer;

Ray show~d his
Monmouth's top scorer, to ten
.
. this honor more thaijprice,
·
J\lso
,,
all
around abi}jty by pickiilg off
·,
points, Ray contributed greatly
by DON DTJFF\'
_
:
Ray
;
joins a small circle of Maris(:
·
9 rebounds
:
3n
.
4 by passing off_
·
to
:
thisteam win over Monmouth
1'!ineStraight
·-_
~
·
~~
.
.
~
··.
·
~:
.
i
:
·.'
-
p~~yers
.
-
Wh9
·
h~~~
-
~~~2i-giv~~~,iis"

_
;
-for
.
_
7
_
·:_;,
~5gj~tS
~
-
::-·
_
:J1:tis.'
_-:
.
Y/~
:
oVer
_··:·
Coll¢gfr~~-8?~·
·
.
;
·
..
·
:_
-
.
. >.
Funny
,
thing about the Manst Vars1,ty
is
_
that
enroute to a
13-3
:
honor .
.
Only thxee
.
e>therp~aye_rs,
,
Nxack
.
~99
s
§6)
,
Vias 1~pClrtant
-
Cap~am
·
Bill
Spenla was g1.ven
'.{
re~drd) they ha,v~
-
beco:"1e a. real
.
good squa~.
'
When the
~eason ~egan
,
,
){en Tbompson
(il9\\'
playm¥ lo~
.
:
·
because 1t was
,:
a
_
league ga~e_.
,
1n
,
an
_
honorable
:__
me11tion for three
_
·
I
honestly
felt
they didn't have thete,m that
_
was
a~ goo4
·
asJast
~
.
N.Y.U.);
·
Bill
.
Gowap (1000 pomt
..
-
..
another league
:
game
·
.
agamst
.
fine performances. They
.
were
as
·
·
·
year~ .
.-
Thctbigg~t problem that existed
.
was in
'
_the back court Ray·
-
scorer); an9 Bill ¥~Ki,ni5try have

King'~ (N;Y
.
)
it was Clar~~ who -
.-
follows: Monmouth "
:
25
.
pts. -
Clarke played uhderthe shadows of Ray Charlton
·
last. year. q1arltoil
·
bee11 selected t
_
o thisJeam.
·
_ ·

·
contnbuted to the cause with
16
.
14
:
rebounds; King's
.
.
(N.Y;) -
8
.
has, il'-tremendous shof. aria there
·
was
no neeµ for Clarke
J<>
shoot•
.
..
'..
Ray received this hc;mor on the
.
.
.
points in '
'
another C.A.C,C.
·
~
_ pts. -
.
XI
-
rebounds;
,
Nyack - 20
..
Therefore there
was
doubt
iii
rtiy mind- how· well he could pez:forni.
_
:
basis of his fine performance last
·
(109-89k
:•
'<
0
'
.
<
·
_
· ·
,
· -
_
-
_
.
pts
~
7 rebounds~
,
-
·
.
.
·
·
Ray has proved that' he can shoot'with the best of _the~
.
and
his
·
week, leading the team
.
to three
-
On Sa ttirday
_
night
;
,
.
Ray
.
,c
Que

to these three impressive
_
selection to the ECAC team of the week attests to his ability. Ray
_
·
· __
.
wins
:
Marist has been rated ninth
·
has given
·
me
·
more'.thrills this
:
year on
·
.the co1.1rt than
·
anyone
.
else in_
..
·
in
.~
the
.
N.Y
;
State Weekly Poll
.
·
_-
my many
years
at
Marist. !,es Chinery·Jias impr(?ved
200%
:;ince the
·
--.
This
is
·
due_ mainly
·
to an
all
.
·
start of tlie ye,!r. \Vhen Clarke fgule4 oufof. the M_onmo~th
'
game
-.-
·.around team effort
:-'
)--
·
_
,
wjtltseven plus
·
minutes to go
,
Les took
.
over control of·thegame.
-
~;;-c•.<;:eriter
•·
:
RaY
·
.
Manning is
and)ed
the
Red Foxes to the big 91-85 victory. Jhe.up front trio of
·
_
_
-currently leading the team in
.
Scott, Spenla and Man~g have just been magnificent.
.
Scott
has·
·
scoring 16.3; and
:
k
only 74
·
been very consistent
.
all year, He has been shooting the eyes out of
_
points away fro,m joining the
·
th~
·
bask~t.
He
h~n•t fouled oqt
.
of melas_Hour games and went
-
~6
.
-
·
1000 point cluowhich he should
• .
.
mmutes
m
the Kings game before he comnutted a foul. A new Manst
reach
.
very soon. Forward Bill
_
.
_
:
·
C~llege r~cord for Joe whose major is fouling
out:
Bill Spenla played
~-•••■
~
,lf!iiiriilifiiiiiliiiliii.ii


:
;;
Spenhi" is the team's top
.
probably
his
best game of the season against Monmouth
_
with 25
-
'•
- rebounder
·averaging
more than
.
points and 7,000 rebounds. Sometimes I wondered if he'd ever come
'.,:
~
_
:
_
Ir a game and should break the
down. Ray
-
Manning sets up home at the fqul line. It seems
,
-
.
,
·
existing career rebound mark.
everytime you turn around Ray is sinking another foul shot. Ray
hit
·
.
{
,
1i
:
~
}
Guard Ray Clarke
is
the
·
team

11
free throws in the big win agains~ Monm~uth. ~d Go~ bless ~ur
·
I
·
I
l
·
leader in
_
assists
·
with an average
.
tremendous b,ench. Steve Shackel
hit
20
pomts agamst
Km~
Pomt
.
•·
,
J
;._._
,
.
,
.
,.,
.
~ffl~~
~~
~~
~~~
9f
6
per
.game.
Ray broke a
and replaced Clarke when he
.
fouled out of the Monmouth game.
single game record for
assists
(9)
Brian McGo
_
wen has added
-strength
in
all three positions when
t1
against Albany St, a11d lie could
starter gets inf
oul trouble. Bob
.
tnlrich, Instant Offense
has
provided
become
Marists
top
assist man of
the
_
offensive spark recently with 12 against Kin~. Ed Reilly
.
and
.
Jim
all time.
·
Cosentin9 have been ample back up-for
·
Clarke and Chenery. And
-
-
~
This
Saturday
·
night
Marist
the best for last, Dennis Curtain. The infamous leader of the Raiders
.
faces
.
defending C.A.C.C.
_
Dennis_ i~ the only known baJJ player to get a standing ovation for
champion Dowling College who
·
entering ·a ball player. Dennis collects Topps baseball cards
so
he can
are currently 14th in the weekly
chew the gum and make bubbles. Do it for Mary, Dennis!!
, state poll.
This
game is a must
CHEERLEADERS
.
_
,
.
;;,,
4 ,
.
-
'
win
for
marist as
they put a 10

·
We
all kid the girls but nothing is ever said good about them .
.
They
~
game home streak on the line in
ltave come
a
long way from last year and deserve proper recognition.
· ·
,
.
·
,
;
~
:
s
e
a
r ch for
a
C.
A •
C. C.
They practice Jong, hard hours
and
have improved greatly. Let's give
-
>-
-
I
..
'
,
..-
\!
(,
.,,
Championship.
th~ girls
a little support and a good hand clap at the next gam_e. Do it
*
* * * •
for
Dennis,
Mary!!!
.
BRUCE POTTER
moftS
through three Albany St. defenders
·
Be Good
for two points.
Love Duff
I
'

j_--'
.'


8.3.1
8.3.2
8.3.3
8.3.4
8.3.5
8.3.6
8.3.7
8.3.8